Cop this Lot

Cop this Lot (1960) is a popular Australian comic novel written by John O'Grady under the pen name "Nino Culotta", the name of the main character of the book.[1] It is a sequel to the even more popular They're a Weird Mob.

Cop This Lot
AuthorJohn O'Grady, "Nino Culotta"
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreComic novel
PublisherUre Smith, Sydney
Publication date
1960
Pages220 pp
Preceded byThey're a Weird Mob 
Followed byGone Fishin' 

Plot

Giovanni 'Nino' Culotta[2] is an Italian immigrant, who came to Australia as a journalist, but became a brickie's labourer. Now, several years later, he is a builder, and married to Kay, with a daughter Maria and son Nino junior.

Nino decides to travel back to Italy to see his parents, and takes not only Kay, but his mates Joe and Dennis, who have never left Sydney. They travel by aeroplane and cargo ship and buy a cheap car in Germany to drive to Italy.

They arrive at the Cullota family villa, and Nino's father, a crusty patriarch, is only concerned that Nino and Kay have not been 'properly' married by an Italian priest.

By the time they return to Sydney, Joe and Dennis, despite their working-class 'Ocker' background, have acquired a veneer of European sophistication, preferring wine to beer and unwilling even to get drunk.

Sequels

The book has two sequels, Gone Fishin' , and Gone Gougin' which feature largely the same cast of characters.

Gone Gougin' takes place in 1975, 10 years after Gone Fishin' , in which Nino's two children (Young Nino and Maria) are now adults.

The novel Gone Fishin' is the only novel not to feature the main characters from the first two books, Joe, Edie and Dennis as primary characters. They appear onwards from chapter 11, and Dennis gets engaged.

In the following book, Gone Gougin' , only Nino, Joe and Dennis (now married) appear, and their wives are only briefly mentioned.

gollark: My laptop is a cheap businessy one I got for £150 and upgraded.
gollark: Here's my experimental notes thing "working" somewhat.
gollark: I have a drawing tablet somewhere because my brother wanted one and didn't use it much, only £60 and it... technically works.
gollark: Minoteaur, my highly WIP notes thing, uses CommonMark + extensions.
gollark: For the stuff I *do* have stored digitally, they're wikitext, which allows formatting a bit.

See also

References

  1. Natinla Library of Australia - Cop This Lot by Nino Cullotta
  2. "Culotta" is rough Italian slang for "big arse"


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